How attackers use phishing kits for their campaigns

How cyber criminals use several phishing kits to run malicious campaigns and which is the economy behind this category of attacks?

Most of the major banks and companies that suffer this type of attacks make people aware of phishing, but despite the high level of awareness of the threat, the phenomenon does not slow down, indeed seems to accelerate more and more. Run a phishing campaign is becoming quite easy also for inexperienced criminal that wants to steal user data. As a direct consequence, criminals with the necessary technical knowledge started to offer phishing kits that can be downloaded by anyone for few dollars as explained by Symantec:

“Scammers can buy these kits for between US$2 to $10, though they have also been observed stealing them. They don’t have to have a lot of technical skills to use these kits—with just a little knowledge of PHP, they can customize their phishing pages to suit their needs. The scammers can then use the stolen data for their own purposes or sell it on underground marketplaces. ” states Symantec.

Among the most versatile phishing kit identified by the Anti – Fraud Command Center ( AFCC ) RSA, there was the Universal phishing kit. This phishing kit was easily configurable and very versatile.

Many other phishing kits are now available on the web, some of them for free, most of the buyers usually ignore that sometimes the sellers hide part of the code in the kits pages. The hidden code could allow them to siphon data collected from victims unbeknownst to the criminals that use phishing kit … basically, the scammer is scammed.

The procedure

Once users downloads the phishing kit need to make the right steps in order to go live. First of all, they have to find a website to host the phishing page. Crooks use numerous tools available on the market to scan the internet and search for a vulnerable website to control. Typically scammers use compromised servers or they rent an entire infrastructure to run the malicious campaigns.

Once scammers have found the suitable place to locate the phishing page they can upload them to start the scam. Once the phishing kit was deployed, phishers need to install a Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) mailer so that they can import a list of users’ emails and send the phishing messages in bulk.

In order to remain under the radar, criminals adopt different techniques to hide phishing kits to search engines and security firms, some of the tactics, as explained by Symantec, include:

.htaccess files with a list of blocked IP addresses related to bots from search engines and security companies

robots.txt files that are used to prevent search engine or security company bots from accessing specific remote directories

PHP scripts that dynamically check if the remote IP address is allowed to access the phishing pages. These scripts are often included as part of the phishing kit.

The data collected could be used by the scammer or sold in the numerous underground markets hosted on the Deep Web. Here you can buy stolen credit card data in some cases, sellers also offers replacement services in case of deactivation of the card, for an extra few Bitcoins.

Other phishing tools:

In addition to the phishing kits, the underground offer for scammers includes video tutorials that explain how to create phishing pages, or build your own page with tools of social engineering included in the principal Linux distributions for Pen Tester. Every novice could be a dangerous scammer, for this reason a wider audience of criminals is attracted by this profitable business.

Whichever way the phishing page is created to avoid being scammed it is always best to check that you are using an https connection before entering your personal data. Unfortunately, this precaution is not enough to protect users, it is important to verify that the site belongs to the company that you are dealing with, especially verifying the field Issued to in the certificate when you are using the HTTPs protocol.

The experts are observing the adoption of HTTPS for mobile phishing. As explained by Paul Pajares, Fraud Analyst at TrendMicro, use HTTPS for phishing activities, doesn’t need a supplementary effort for cyber criminals, they can either compromise sites that already use HTTPS, or use legitimate websites that already use HTTPS.

“One of the reasons for this spike is that it is easy for cybercriminals to create websites that use HTTPS: they can either compromise sites that already use HTTPS, or use legitimate hosting sites or other services that already use HTTPS. There is no need for the cybercriminals to acquire their own SSL certificate, since they have just abused or compromised servers that do have valid certificates.” reports the blog post published by TrendMicro.

Alessandro Contini operates as Cyber Security Consultant in national and international realities. Starting from a long experience and technical expertise on system architectures in particular related to Critical Infrastructure. Alessandro collaborates as Cyber Intelligence specialist to find deeper information in Cyber Crime and Terrorism scenarios.

Share On

Pierluigi Paganini is member of the ENISA (European Union Agency for Network and Information Security) Threat Landscape Stakeholder Group and Cyber G7 Group, he is also a Security Evangelist, Security Analyst and Freelance Writer.
Editor-in-Chief at "Cyber Defense Magazine", Pierluigi is a cyber security expert with over 20 years experience in the field, he is Certified Ethical Hacker at EC Council in London. The passion for writing and a strong belief that security is founded on sharing and awareness led Pierluigi to find the security blog "Security Affairs" recently named a Top National Security Resource for US.
Pierluigi is a member of the "The Hacker News" team and he is a writer for some major publications in the field such as Cyber War Zone, ICTTF, Infosec Island, Infosec Institute, The Hacker News Magazine and for many other Security magazines.
Author of the Books "The Deep Dark Web" and “Digital Virtual Currency and Bitcoin”.